(3 Oct 2017) Rebels fighting Indian rule in Kashmir stormed a paramilitary camp outside a regional airport early on Tuesday and at least one suspected militant has been killed and three soldiers injured in the attack, police said.
An unspecified number of militants attacked the heavily guarded camp in the region's main city of Srinagar, hurling grenades and spraying automatic gunfire, said top officer S.P. Vaid. He said soldiers were responding to the militants' gunfire.
A police officer said one suspected rebel was killed in the fighting so far. The officer spoke on condition of anonymity in keeping with department policy.
The camp houses a battalion of India's Border Security Force and only barbed wire separates it from the Srinagar airport, which is controlled and run by the Indian Air Force. The camp has previously been a notorious interrogation centre where suspected rebels and their sympathizers would be detained, questioned and allegedly tortured.
Officials said the airport, which is on a plateau and encircled by military and paramilitary camps, was safe.
Residents in the neighbourhood said they heard dozens of blasts and intermittent gunfire was still ongoing. Besides being a highly guarded security zone because of the location of the strategic airport, many top former bureaucrats, police officials and politicians have residences in the area.
Reinforcements of counterinsurgency police and paramilitary commandos rushed to the scene and armoured vehicles dotted the entire road leading to the airport.
No anti-India rebel group immediately commented on the fighting.
India and Pakistan each administer part of Kashmir, but both claim it in its entirety. Rebel groups have been fighting since 1989 for Kashmir to be united either under Pakistani rule or as an independent country.
Anti-India sentiment runs deep in Kashmir's mostly Muslim population and most people support the rebels' cause. Nearly 70,000 people have been killed in the uprising and the ensuing Indian military crackdown.
India accuses Pakistan of arming and training the rebels, which Pakistan denies.
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